Shows (C)
Cabahooray!
Cabaret Whore Encore
Cactus: The Seduction
Calculated Risk
Cambridge Footlights: Good For You
Cambridge University Revue: The Exorcyst
Cammy And Phil's Late Night Nonsense
Cannonball Impro
Carey Marx: Scoundrel
Carl Barron
Carole Jahme Is Bio-Diverse!
Caroline Mabey: Eat Your Friends
Caroline Rhea
Catherine Semark's Curriculum
Catriona Knox: People In Glass Houses
Celebrity Autobiography
Celia Pacquola in Flying Solos
Cellophane
Chandrika Chevli: Where's My Bike?
Charity Shop Cabaret
Charlie Talbot: Someone Better Known
Charlotte Young: Audi, Vide, Tace
Charlyne Yi: Dances on the Moon
Charm/Offensive
Charmed Forces
Checkley Bush
The Cheeky Beggars Banquet
Chef!
The Chelsea Grin
The Chemical Poets
Chloe Philip: Accept Your Inner Plonker
Chortle Presents Fast Fringe [Edinburgh 2010]
Chortle Student Comedy Award Final 2010
Chris Addison [2010]
Chris Cross: Escaping From Reality [2010]
Chris Cross: Loose Cannon
Chris McCausland: Emotional Retard
Chris McGlade: The Bad Lad Lands
Chris Ramsey: Aggrophobic
Christian Schulte-Loh: I Am German, I Should Not Be Here!
Circus Burlesque
Circus Trick Tease
Clarkson And Crouch: Neighbourhood Watch
The Clean As Possible Comedy Show [2010]
Clever Peter: Blood, Sweat & Tears
The Clinic
Cockburn & Rowntree: 28 Days Of Laughter
Colin Hoult: Enemy Of The World
Collins And Herring Podcast Live
The Comeback Convention
Comedy Baby 2010
Comedy Bitch: Them Is Us
Comedy Countdown 2010
Comedy Doodle Presents Matt Thomas, Stephanie Laing, Andrea Hubert and Robbie McHugh
Comedy Gala 2010: In Aid of Waverley Care
Comedy in the Dark
Comedy Mentalist Hank Stone
Comedy Mish Mash
Comedy Reserve [2010]
Comedy With Your Cash
The Comedy World War
Comedy Zone 2010
Comic Fringes [2010]
Coming Ready Or Not
The Complexity Of Nonsense
Confessions Of A Smart Wrestling fan
Conor O'Toole: Come Look At Me For An Hour
The Couch
The Crack [2010]
Craig Hill: Why Don't You Come Down The Front?
Creatures
The Cuban Brothers
Show Details
Cactus: The Seduction
Show type: Edinburgh Fringe 2010

Cactus: The Seduction


+
Description

This multi award-winner is both an irresistible love story and a carnival of boundless imaginings. Directed by Mark Chavez of Pajama Men

+
Reviews

Cactus: The Seduction
Live Review

Cactus: The Seduction rated 3/5
Cactus: The Seduction

Though wonderfully executed, Cactus: The Seduction wears its cleverness rather too prominently on its sleeve, slipping too easily into pretentiousness and too reluctantly into funny.

Poor Jonno Katz, whose award-winning clown-like performance this is, doesn’t even warrant a mention in this show’s entry Fringe programme – although the show’s director Mark Chavez does. But then again, he is half of the awesome Pajama Men.

So it’s unsurprising that Cactus shares some characteristics with Chavez’s own act: switching between multiple characters (with a supporting cast that gets as obscure as a pair of scorpions) and featuring a heavy dollop of physical comedy, with scenes of gory excess conveyed only in mime.

Part of this tale is told as a New Zealand narrator called Phil, telling the story of when he went walking through a desert of loneliness with Russian companion Yuri and Brit Eric, ostensibly in search of love but metaphorically on a journey of self-discovery as they swap tall tales and small talk.

In whatever guise, Katz works the room expertly, though the script is droll rather than hilarious. A couple of lines stand out, though, including a witty stand-up routine about lost virginity. Though hard-earned points are lost for making the audience fake an orgasm in a cheap bit of participation.

Other than this, the wonderfully expressive Katz often mocks his own script’s highfalutin aims, but making light of the fact doesn’t quite negate them; while the mime elements, though expertly performed, never really seemed to make a connection.

It’s an ambitious attempt to meld various styles into one coherent piece of theatrical comedy, but the isolated moments of funny don’t gel into a more satisfying whole.

Date of live review: Monday 23rd Aug, '10
Review by Steve Bennett
+
Comments

No comments are currently available for this show.


Have your say:
:
:
: